Comments by "Harry Mills" (@harrymills2770) on "Law&Crime Network"
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@elstongunn4277 Crime-scene investigators aren't detectives. I could be wrong, but I think McCarthy was a technician. There's a lot more involved in detective work than just the evidence collected at the scene.
If she did it, which seems likely, she saw the phone records as part of her plan, including texting from the victim's phone. It's entirely possible that a CSI would overlook the fact that the victim's phone would ping off a cell tower if it weren't in use. It's an easy thing to overlook. Maybe she thought she turned it off. Maybe she forgot to turn it off. Maybe it didn't occur to her that leaving it on would leave a footprint.
When you're trying to commit a perfect crime, there's any number of ways you can get tripped up. I imagine you probably can't possibly foresee all the different ways you might be exposed. Murder for money or revenge is pretty hard to cover up. Serial killers who kill strangers are the toughest to track down, because there's no clear connection between victim and murderer.
I'd keep in mind too, that your average sociopath thinks everybody else is stupid, because they're CONSTANTLY lying and gaslighting others, sometimes just for their own amusement, and they rarely, if ever, get caught if they keep their misbehavior below a certain threshold. Honest people assume others around them are honest, because living in truth is just a much better way to live your life. Surrounding yourself with trustworthy people and TRUSTING them is a good way to live.
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